1. MARTIN HEIDEGGER
(1) WHAT IS METAPHYSICS? (1929)
(2) POSTSCRIPT TO "WHAT IS METAPHYSICS" (1949 [1943])
(3) INTRODUCTION TO "WHAT IS METAPHYSICS?:
GETTING TO THE BOTTOM OF METAPHYSICS (1949)
TRANSLATED BY
MILES GROTH, PhD
2. TRANSLATOR’S INTRODUCTORY NOTE
Translations of Heidegger are usually not good English, but they can be. It is, of
course, impossible to reconfigure German as English since German formations
follow rules of sense and nonsense that are different from English formations. But
it is possible to bring Heidegger over into English.
Heidegger is colloquial, idiomatic and playful. His German is steeped in
literature, especially in the authors who transformed and enriched the German
language: Meister Eckhart, Luther, Goethe, Lessing, Herder, Schiller, Hölderlin.
Heidegger sometimes gives leeway to assonance for clues about words formed
on the same root. He builds with echoes and then plays on the linguistic
structures disclosed, which reveal the sense embedded in the words.
Reading Heidegger in German, we accompany his discoveries of sense in the
German language. His means of unfolding meaning in the German language
can often be applied to other languages, such as English, where the new
language can be freed for its own playfulness, poetry and idioms.
I have never felt that Heidegger was unclear or deliberately obscure. He wrote
a great deal and, I suspect, fluently. Then, returning to what he had written, a
week later or decades later, he discovered what he had been given by
3. language. He would then rewrite, emend, gloss, edit, qualify, expand what he
had written.
In this translation I do not hope to solve Heidegger's ambiguities or explain them
away. I only want to translate the ambiguities expressed in German into
ambiguities expressed in English.
The three texts translated below are separated from each other by fourteen
and six years, respectively. On July 24, 1929, Heidegger gave his inaugural
lecture "What Is Metaphysics?" to the combined faculties of the University of
Freiburg. He wrote a postscript to this "letter" to his colleagues for the fourth
edition of the publication of the lecture in 1943. For the fifth edition (1949) he
added an introduction to the lecture, entitled "Getting to the Bottom of
Metaphysics [Der Rückgang in den Grund der Metaphysik]."
Though published together in logical order (introduction, lecture, postscript),
Heidegger also presented them chronologically in his anthology Frontier Markers
[Wegmarken] beginning in 1967. The order of presentation there makes more
sense, since as the title of Heidegger's book indicates, each text marks having
reached a new frontier in his thinking. By contrast, his other anthology Dead
Ends [Holzwege] indicates experiments in thinking that were in a certain sense
blind alleys.
4. Heidegger describes the postscript as a preface or foreword. In that sense it
should come first, followed by the introduction, as is the custom in the format of
a book. Or perhaps the postscript should bring us back to the lecture itself. The
order of reading would then be introduction, lecture, postscript, and lecture
again.
For Heidegger, an introduction such as his "Introduction into Metaphysics" from
1935 or "Getting to the Bottom of Metaphysics" has pedagogical significance,
but like the introduction in a piece of classical music, it is designed to bring the
listener into the world of the main theme. It serves to set the mood for the piece.
I have translated the three frontier markers translated grouped around the
lecture "What Is Metaphysics?" in the order of composition. The postscript was
revised for the fifth edition (1949) of the lecture. In an earlier English translation,
published that year, the unrevised postscript was the basis for the translation.
The present translation is based on the Gesamtausgabe edition of Wegmarken
(Volume 9, 1976) and so includes marginal notes gleaned from Heidegger's
copies of the various editions of his lecture.
The order of composition of the three essays which follow was lecture (1929),
postscript (1943, rev. 1949), and introduction (1949). Nonetheless, I am
presenting them as Heidegger did beginning with the fourth edition (1943) of the
5. lecture. In Wegmarken, they are presented chronologically in order of
composition.1
All citations are to the Gesamtausgabe edition of Wegmarken (1976) (Frankfurt:
Klostermann): "Einleitung zu 'Was ist Metaphysik?'" [= EWM and page number],
pp. 365-383; "Was ist Metaphysik?" [= WM and page number], pp. 103-122]; and
"Nachwort zu 'Was ist Metaphysik?'" [=NWM and page number], pp. 303-312.
What Is Metaphysics? The lecture was presented to the faculties of the
University of Freiburg on July 24, 1929 as Heidegger's inaugural address. It was
first translated by R.F.C. Hull and Alan Crick in 1949 and published in Existence
and Being, a collection of Heidegger's essays edited by Werner Brock (Chicago:
Henry Regnery), pp. 325-349. The lecture and postscript (1943 version) have
been reprinted since 1975 in the revised and expanded edition of Walter
Kaufmann's Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre (New York: New American
Library), pp. 242-257. A second translation of only the lecture, by David Krell,
was published in Basic Writings (1977) New York: Harper and Row (expanded
edition, 1993), pp. 93-110.
1 In a note to the first publication in French of a translation of the Introduction ("La Remonté au
Fondement de la Métaphysique"), the translator, Joseph Rovan observes that the Introduction "est conçu
comme une préface à une postface [was conceived as a preface to a postscript]" to the lecture. Fontaine
(Paris) 10, #58, March 1947, p. 888.
6. Postscript to 'What Is Metaphysics?' The postscript was published with the fourth
edition (1943) of the lecture. In this version, it was included with the Hull/Crick
translation of the, ibid., pp.349-361, and in Kaufmann, ibid., pp. 257-264.
Heidegger revised the postscript for the fifth edition (1949). That version is
translated below.
Introduction to 'What Is Metaphysics?'. Getting to the Bottom of Metaphysics
The introduction was written in 1949 and published with the lecture and revised
postscript. It first appeared in a translation by Walter Kaufmann, in 1956, in
Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre (revised edition [1975], pp. 265-279).
7. INTRODUCTION TO "WHAT IS METAPHYSICS?"
GETTING TO THE BOTTOM OF METAPHYSICS (1949)2
Descartes wrote to [Claude] Picot3, who translated the Principia Philosophiae
into French: "Ainsi toute la Philosophie est comme un arbre, dont les racines sont
2 Another possible version of the subtitle is "The Nothing at the Heart of
Metaphysics." The adjective 'rückgängig' can mean "null and void" [nichtig].
Thus the subtitle suggests that the ground of metaphysics is no-thing [das Nichts],
which is the message of the lecture. For this translation of 'das Nichts', see the
lecture. Notes preceded by (*) are Heidegger's marginalia gleaned from his
copies of the various editions of the lecture.
3 Heidegger's citation is to René Descartes, Oeuvres, edited by Charles Adam
and Paul Tannery (Paris: Vrin, 1971 [1897-1910]), Volume IX,2, p. 14. Descartes'
letter to Abbé Picot constitutes his introduction to the Principia in Picot's
translation. For information on Picot, see Descartes' Correspondance, Volume V
(1947) Paris: Presses Universaires de France, pp. 402-404. The current translation,
by John Cottingham, of the "Preface" is in John Cottingham, Robert Stoothoff
and Dugald Murdoch (eds.), The Philosophical Writings of Descartes (1985)
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Volume I, p. 186.
8. la Métaphysique, le tronc est la Physique, et les branches qui sortent de ce tronc
toutes les autres sciences . . .."4
Staying with this image, we ask, in what soil [Boden]5 do the roots of the tree of
philosophy find their support? From what ground6 do the roots and the tree as a
4 "Thus the whole of philosophy is like a tree, whose roots are metaphysics,
the trunk of which is physics, and the branches which extend out from that trunk
are the rest of the sciences."
5 In this translation, frequent interpolation of the original German terms will be
made. Sometimes an entire sentence will be given in a footnote. Other times, a
variant rendering will be given, again in a footnote. This procedure is often
decried as interfering with the flow of the text. It is doubtful than anyone
reading the text will regret not having to turn back to the original German,
especially when its inclusion strengthens the attempt to understand Heidegger's
meaning. Besides, the study of Heidegger's texts requires and repays the labor
of long reflection on the play of language in them.
6 Heidegger will play on two senses of 'Grund': the soil in and out of which
living things grow and the basis or grounds or reasons for something, presented
as evidence for coming to a certain decision about it. I will translate 'Grund'
with "ground," "grounds," "basis" or even "at the heart of." "In den Grund" is
rendered "at bottom." The phrase "Grund und Boden" is translated as "earth" or
"land," the earth one farms or tends. "Grund und Boden" also functions
9. whole receive their vital nourishment and strength? What element, utterly
hidden, controls the supporting and nourishing roots of the tree? What lies
buried and is active in the essence [Wesen]7 of metaphysics? What does
metaphysics look like at bottom? What is metaphysics at bottom after all?
It thinks of be-ing [das Seiende]8 as be-ing. Wherever it is asked what be-ing is,
be-ing as such is in view. Metaphysical formulating [Vorstellen]9 owes this view
idiomatically to mean "utterly." "Im Grunde" becomes "at the heart of,"
"fundamentally," "really," or "at (the) bottom (of)."
7 Sometimes 'Wesen' is translated "nature."
8 By 'das Seiende' Heidegger has in mind effective actuality, real "goings on"
of any kind, in contrast with the "nothing going on" of no-thing [das Nichts].
9 An important theme of the Introduction is how asking a question [eine Frage
zu vorstellen] has become, in metaphysics, formulating, designating, proposing,
making suppositions and apodeictic assertions [Vorstellungen], professing,
representing (that is, or presenting something a second time and therefore in a
second version), assigning meanings -- rather than letting those meaning
emerge on their own. To formulate or designate as metaphysics does is to affirm
as incontrovertibly true, almost as a confession of faith. In professing,
metaphysics also invariably promotes what it proposes. It seeks to further itself
and what it puts forward. By contrast, teaching, like poetic speaking, is quite
10. to the light*10 of be[ing] [Sein].11 The light itself (what such thinking experiences
as light, that is) no longer comes into view in this thinking, because it presents
be-ing always and only with respect to be-ing. In view of this, metaphysical
thinking certainly asks about an actual [seienden] source and creator [Urheber]
of the light. From this alone it is evident enough that every perspective grants a
view [Durchsicht] of be-ing.
However be-ing may be explained, whether as spirit [Geist] in the sense of
spirituality [Spiritualismus], as becoming [Werden] and being alive [Leben], as
formulation [Vorstellung], as will [Wille], as substance [Substanz], as subject
different from professing. The phenomenological ideal, we recall, is knowledge
without belief.
10 Heidegger's marginal notes in his copies of the various editions of the
lecture are included in the Gesamtausgabe edition of Wegmarken. They will be
cited with edition number.
*Fifth edition (1949): "Lichtung [illuminating]." (EWM 365) The term "light" is
used in the phrase "in light of."
11 With this term, Heidegger announces the 'be-' ['das Sein'] in 'be-ing' ['das
Seiende'], that is, the 'Sei-' (root) of 'das Seiende'. I choose the form 'be[ing]' to
underscore how awkward this must come to sound. This linguistic contraption is
meant to give pause. I pronounce it 'be'. In a certain way, the bare infinitive
'be' has been the most questionable matter for Heidegger's thinking.
11. [Subjekt], as energeia, or as the eternal return of the equivalent [ewige
Wiederkehr des Gleichen]12, be-ing appears as be-ing each time in light of
be[ing]. Whenever metaphysics formulates be-ing, it has there shed light on
be[ing]. Be[ing] has arrived with[in] emergence [Unverborgenheit] (Z__:____).13
Whether and how be[ing] brings such emergence with it, whether and how it
brings itself along*14 into and as metaphysics in the first place remains obscure.
12 For this translation of 'die Gleiche', see my essay "Who Is Heidegger's
Nietzsche," a review article of the English translations of Heidegger's Nietzsche
(1960).
13 The sense is of something stepping out of the shadows or coming out of
seclusion and being turned over to someone after having been in hiding. As
Z__:____, emergence is determined as having been deprived or relieved of
forgetfulness (_:__) by be[ing]. Perhaps "emergedness" would work here.
14 *Fifth edition (1949): "An-bringen: Gewähren die Unverborgenheit und in
dieser Unverborgenes, Anwesendes. Im Anwesen verbirgt sich: An-bringen von
Unverborgenheit, die Anwesendes answesen läßt. 'das Sein selbst' ist das Sein in
seiner Wahrheit, welche Wahrheit zum Sein gehört, d.h. in welche Wahrheit 'Sein'
entschwindet [bringing along: affording / granting of emergence, and in this
emerging, apprésenting (making present to). In apprésenting is hidden the
bringing along of emergence, which apprésenting lets itself apprésent. 'Be[ing]
itself' is be[ing] in its truth, truth which belongs to be[ing], that is, truth in which
'be[ing]' vanishes]." (EWM 366)
12. Be[ing] is not thought in its disclosing nature [entbergenden Wesen], that is, in its
truth. Nevertheless, in its answer to the question about be-ing as such,
metaphysics speaks out of an unnoticed obviousness [Offenbarkeit] of be[ing].
We can therefore call the truth of be[ing] the ground in which metaphysics as
the root of the tree of philosophy is supported, by means of which it is nourished.
Because metaphysics questions be-ing as be-ing, it is left to be-ing and does not
turn to be[ing] as be[ing]. As the root of the tree, it sends nourishment and
strength out into its trunk and branches. A root branches out into the land
[Grund und Bogen] and so, for the good of the tree, goes out of it and thus can
take leave of it. The tree of philosophy grows out of the rootbed of metaphysics.
The earth in fact is the element in which the root of the tree comes to be
[west]15, but the growth of the tree is never able to absorb the rootbed so that it
disappears as something tree-like16 in the tree. Instead, the roots lose
themselves in a thickset knot of fibers in the soil. The ground is ground for the
root which for the good of the tree forgets itself in it. But the root still belongs to
the tree, even though in its own way it commits itself to the element of the soil. It
15 The verb 'wesen' will be translated as "to come to be" or "to come to pass."
What 'west' arrives precisely in order to pass on; it never "is" in the sense of the
verbs '_®___', 'esse', and '(to) be', all of which imply some kind of fixity or stasis.
'Wesen' also connotes "being brought to pass."
16 That is, as something philosophical . . .
13. uses up [verschwindet] its element and itself in this [element]. As a root, it does
not care about the soil, at least not in such wise that it would appear to be its
nature to grow solely in that element and spread out only through it.
Presumably, this element would not be the element it is were it not that the root
weaves its way through it.
Metaphysics, insofar as it always formulates be-ing as be-ing, does not think
about [denkt nicht an] be[ing] itself. Philosophy does not focus on its basis [auf
ihren Grund].*17 In fact, in metaphysics, it always abandons it. But nevertheless
it never escapes it. If thinking sets out to experience the basis of metaphysics, to
the extent that such thinking tries to think the truth of be[ing] itself instead of only
formulating be-ing as be-ing, it has in a certain way abandoned metaphysics.
Seen from the perspective of metaphysics, such thinking goes back to the basis
of metaphysics. But what thus still appears to be the basis, the essence of
metaphysics, presumably because it is experienced from out of itself as
something else and unspoken, is, accordingly, also something other than
metaphysics.
Thinking which thinks about the truth of be[ing] is not satisfied with metaphysics,
of course, but neither does it think against metaphysics. Figuratively speaking, it
17 *Fifth edition (1949): "Sein und Grund: das Selbe [Be[ing] and basis: the
same]." (EWM 367)
14. does not "uproot" the root of philosophy; it digs into its ground and ploughs its
land. Metaphysics continues to be first philosophy [das Erste der Philosophie].
First thinking [Das Erste des Denkens] is not attained.18 Metaphysics is gotten
over [überwunden] in thinking about the truth of be[ing]. The claim of
metaphysics to govern the relationship to "be[ing]" and definitively to determine
every relation to be-ing as such becomes invalid. But this "getting over
metaphysics" doesn't get rid of metaphysics. As long as man is the animal
rationale, he is the animal metaphysicum. As long as man understands himself
as a reasonable living thing [Lebewesen], metaphysics, in Kant's words, belongs
to the nature [Natur] of man.19 On the other hand, if it is successful in getting
18 First philosophy or authentic philosophy, "$F*_ .__ & .<_, philosophy in the
primary sense, which Heidegger wants to ground. Metaphysics is also being
characterized here as the beginning of philosophy. First thinking, a play on "$F*_
.__ & .<_, is more basic than first philosophy, i.e., metaphysics.
19 Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason (Second Edition, 1787), translated
by Norman Kemp Smith [1929] New York: St. Martin's Press (1965), p. 56. " . . .
metaphysics actually exists, if not as a science, yet still as a natural disposition
[Metaphysik ist, wenn gleich nichts als Wissenschaft, doch als Naturanlage]
(metaphysica naturalis)." (Kritik der reinen Vernunft, in Gesammelte Schriften
(1911), Band III, Berlin: Reimer, p. 41 [B 21].) In Kant's Prolegomena to Any Future
Metaphysics that Can Qualify as Science (1783), translated by Paul Carus [1902],
New York: Open Court (1988), metaphysics had also been referred to as a
15. back to the basis of metaphysics, thinking might well also occasion a change in
the essence of man, a change which brings along with it a transformation of
metaphysics.
If, therefore, in the development of the question about the truth of be[ing], we
speak about getting over metaphysics, this means keeping in mind be[ing] itself.
Such keeping in mind goes beyond what heretofore has been not thinking [das
Nichtdenken] about the ground of the root of philosophy. The thinking
attempted in Being and Time (1927) set out on a path to prepare for getting
over metaphysics so understood. However, the one who sets such thinking on its
way can only be what is itself to be [doing the] thinking [das zu Denkende
selbst].*20 That and how only be[ing] itself comes to thinking is never only or at
first the say of thinking. That and how be[ing] itself affects thinking brings
thinking to the verge of arising from be[ing] itself in order to be in accord with
be[ing] as such.*21
"natural tendency" of man (p. 135). (Prolegomena zu einer jeden künftigen
Metaphysik, die als Wissenschaft wird auftreten können, in Gesammelte
Schriften, Band IV, p. 363.)
20 *Fifth edition (1949): "was heißt Denken [what do we call thinking]?" (EWM
368) Variant: What cries out to be thought?
21 *Fifth edition (1949): "Ereignis [event / (the) coming into its own /
enownment]." (EWM 368)
16. But then when is such getting over metaphysics necessary? Should the one
discipline in philosophy that until now has been its root be merely undermined
and supplanted in this way by one that is more original? Is it a question of a
change in the doctrinal system of philosophy? No. Or, by getting to the bottom
of metaphysics, shall an until now overlooked precondition of philosophy be
uncovered, and it be settled that it does not yet stand on an unshakable
foundation and therefore cannot at this point be an unconditional science?
No.
The arrival or non-arrival on the scene of the truth of be[ing] is about something
else: not the constitution of philosophy, not just philosophy itself, but rather the
nearness [Nähe] and distance of that from which philosophy, as the formulating
thinking of be-ing as such, gets its essence and necessity. It has yet to be
decided whether be[ing] itself, in relationship to the essence of man, can*22
come into its own out of its own truth, or whether metaphysics, in its
estrangement from its basis, denies as in days gone by that the relationship of
be[ing] to the essence of man comes from the essence of this relationship itself
which man plays out [zum Gehören bringt] with be[ing].23
22 *Fifth edition (1949): "Brauch [customary usage]." (EWM 369)
23 Man and be[ing] perform the relationship in two-part counterpoint. I think
of Bach's two-part fugues or his Praeambula (Inventionen). Be[ing] calls the
17. Metaphysics has already formulated be[ing] beforehand in its answer to the
question about be-ing as such. It necessarily speaks of be[ing], and continually
of that. But metaphysics does not put be[ing] itself into words, since it does not
consider either be[ing] in its truth or truth as emergence, and this in its
essence.*24 The essence of truth25 appears to metaphysics only in the already
derived form of the truth of knowledge and statements about that. But
emergence might just be what is more original [Anfänglicheres] than truth in the
tune, man sings it. Be[ing] sounds the ground bass with which man harmonizes
and against which he plays the melody. This Bezug [relationship] is the Beiträge
zur Philosophie (Vom Ereignis) [Contributions about Philosophy (On the Event)]
(1936-38), Gesamtausgabe 65 (1989) Frankfurt: Klostermann.
24 *Fifth edition (1949): "entbergende bergende Ge-währnis als Ereignis
[discovering hiding warranty as event / enownment]." (EWM 369)
25 See the essay of the same name, first published in 1930, in Wegmarken, pp.
177-202, and in the translations by R.F.C. Hull and Alan Crick, in Existence and
Being (1949) Washington: Regnery Gateway, 1988, pp. 292-324, and by John
Sallis, in Basic Writings (1977) San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco (rev. ed., 1993),
pp. 111-138.
18. sense of veritas.*26 Z__:____ might just be the word that gives an as yet
unexperienced glimpse into the unthought essence of esse [be]. If this should
be so, then, admittedly, the formulating thinking of metaphysics could never
arrive at that essence of truth, no matter how keenly it might look historically into
pre-Socratic philosophy, for it is not a question of some renaissance of pre-
Socratic philosophy (it would be vain and nonsensical to have something like
that in mind) but rather of paying attention to the arrival of the as yet unspoken
essence of emergence as what be[ing] has announced itself to be.*27 In the
meantime, metaphysics harbors the truth of be[ing] throughout its history from
Anaximander to Nietzsche. Why doesn't metaphysics think about it? Is the
omitting of such thinking just part of the nature [Art] of metaphysical thinking?
Or does it belong to the fate of the essence of metaphysics that it draws away
from its own basis, because in the realization [Aufgehen] of emergence what is
coming to pass [Wesende] in it, namely, hiddenness [Verborgenheit],*28 always
26 *Fifth edition (1949): "Veritas bei Thomas immer in intellectu, und sei der
intellectus divinus [veritas according to Thomas Aquinas is always in intellectu (in
the mind), and is the intellectus divinus (mind of God)]." (EWM 369)
27 *Fifth edition (1949): "Sein, Wahrheit, Welt, , Ereignis [be[ing], truth, world, [],
event / enownment]." (EWM 369) '' refers to 'Sein' not vocalized, unenunciated.
28 *Fifth edition (1949): "_:__ als Verbergung [forgetting as hiding]." (EWM 370)
(In EWM, there is a misprint of the spelling of _:__.)
19. fails to appear, in favor, as it happens, of what is emerging [das Unverborgenen]
emerging just so as to be able to appear as be-ing?
But now metaphysics continually and in the most various ways speaks about
be[ing]. It alone gives and reinforces the appearance of asking and answering
the question about be[ing]. But metaphysics never answers the question about
the truth of be[ing] because it does not ask the question. It doesn't ask because
it only has be[ing] in mind [denkt] while it formulates be-ing as be-ing. It means
be-ing as a whole [im Ganzen] but speaks of be[ing]. It names it be[ing] but
means be-ing as be-ing. From beginning to end, the statements of metaphysics
move in a strange sort of way in a general mix-up*29 about be-ing and be[ing].
Admittedly, we think of the mix-up as an eventuality [Ereignis] and not as a
mishap.30 In no way could it have its basis in mere thoughtlessness or hastiness
29 *Fifth edition (1949): "Verwechslung : die Gebundenheit in das Hinüber zu
Sein und das Herüber zu Seiendem. Eines steht stets im anderen und für das
andere, 'Auswechslung', 'Wechsel', bald so, bald so [mix-up: being caught up in
crossing over to be[ing] and crossing back to be-ing. The one is always in the
other and for the other, 'exchange', 'changeover / alteration', now this way,
now that]." (EWM 370)
30 This is a revealing use of the fundamental term in Heidegger's vocabulary,
'Ereignis'. In this passage, an 'Ereignis' is contrasted with a 'Fehler'. A 'Fehler' is a
mishap or mistake or accident, which comes unexpectedly, while an 'Ereignis' is
20. of speaking. Accordingly, thanks to this general mix-up, formulating attains the
height of confusion [Verwirrung] when one claims that metaphysics poses the
question about be[ing] [Seinsfrage].31
It seems almost as though metaphysics, in the way it thinks be-ing, were without
knowing it thereby shown to be the barrier that denies man the original*32
relationship of be[ing] to the essence of man [zum Menschenwesen].
But what if the nonoccurrence [Ausbleiben] of this relationship and the
forgottenness of this nonoccurrence were to determine the entire modern age?
What if the nonoccurrence of be[ing] leaves man ever more exclusively in the
an event that is bound to happen. It may have been planned or hoped for, as
in the usage when 'Ereignis' refers to the birth of a child.
31 The various combinations beginning with the morpheme 'Sein-' will be
translated with either "of be[ing]," by be[ing]," "of and by be[ing]," or "about
be[ing]." In every case, Heidegger sees the "action" of be[ing] in counterpoint
with the other element of the term; for example, in ' -verständnis', ' -
verlassenheit', ' -vergessenheit', or ' -geschick', be[ing] is both the source and
destination of the 'understanding', 'abandonment', 'forgottenness', or 'venture'.
32 *Fifth edition (1949): "Das an-fangende, im An-fangen wesende Ereignis --
brauchend -- die Enteignis [the originating, at the outset présenting eventuality -
- having use of (needing) -- dispossession (dépassement)." (EWM 370)
21. hands of be-ing, so that man almost abandons the relationship of be[ing] to his
essence (man's essence), and this abandonment at the same time remains
hidden? What if this were the case, and has been so for a long time now?
What if there were now indications that henceforth this forgottenness is
preparing for an even more decided forgottenness?
Would there still be reason for someone thinking in such a way to comport
himself arrogantly in the face of this venture [Geschick] of be[ing]? Would there
still be any reason to be led to believe in something else with such
abandonment of and by be[ing] [Seinsverlassenheit], and this entirely out of a
self-induced haughty mood? If that is the way it is with the forgottenness of
be[ing] [Seinsvergessenheit], would this not be reason enough for thinking which
thinks about be[ing] to consequently become horrified at not being able to do
anything but endure in dread this venture by be[ing], in order to bring thinking of
the forgottenness of be[ing] to resolution for the first time? But how would
thinking be able to do this, as long as the dread consigned to it is only a kind of
depressed mood [gedrückte Stimmung]? What does the venture of this dread
by be[ing] have to do with psychology and psychoanalysis?
But suppose getting over metaphysics corresponded to efforts to pay attention
for once to the forgottenness of be[ing], in order to experience it and
incorporate the experience into the relationship of be[ing] to man and look
after it there, then the question "What is metaphysics?", in distress [Not] about
22. the forgottenness of and by be[ing], would perhaps go on being what is most
necessary in what is necessary for thinking.
It thus means everything that thinking become more thoughtful in its own time.
That comes about when, instead of exerting a greater degree of effort, thinking
points to another origin. Thinking that is posited by be-ing as such and is
formulated and illuminated by it then, comes to be replaced by thinking that
comes into its own from be[ing] itself and in that way belongs to be[ing].
All efforts are at a loss that try to see how what is and remains only metaphysical
formulating is immediately to be put into action in a more effective and useful
way in ordinary everyday life [Leben]. For the more thoughtful thinking
becomes, the more appropriately it is fulfilled by the relationship of be[ing] to it,
the more purely thinking really comes on its own to behave in a way that is
appropriate only to it in thinking of what is destined for it [des ihm Zu-
23. gedachten]*33 and therefore of what has already been thought of
[Gedachten].34
But who still recalls what has been thought of?35 People think things up. To get
thinking on a path so that, in relationship with be[ing] it gets to the essence of
man, to open a pathway for thinking expressly to consider be[ing] in its truth*36 is
what the thinking of Being and Time is "about [unterwegs]." In this way, and that
33 Variant: . . . what one is to have thought . . ..
*Fifth edition (1949): "Zu-gesagten, Ge-währten, Ereigneten [what is to
have been said, what has been afforded / brought forth, what has eventuated
/ been brought into its own / come to pass]."
34 In that event, what is thought of (remembered) and what is thought about
coincide.
35 "Doch wer denkt noch an Gedachtes?" (EWM 372) Variant: To whom does
it occur to think about what has already been thought about? The point is that
most people are sure that everything worth thinking about has already been
thought through thoroughly enough, especially such matters as what counts as
worth thoughtful reflection, was heißt Denken.
36 *Fifth edition (1949): "Wahrnis als Ereignis [observance as eventuality]."
(EWM 372) 'Wahrnis' is thus being considerate of, looking after, observing (as
one would an anniversary or religious feast) the truth of be[ing].
24. means in the service of the question of the truth of be[ing], reflection on the
essence of man becomes necessary, since the unspoken because still to be
accomplished experience of the forgottenness of be[ing] includes the all-
important suspicion that, in consequence of the emergence of be[ing], the
relationship of human nature [Menschenwesen] to be[ing] indeed belongs to
be[ing] itself. Yet how could such surmising as is experienced here ever even
become an explicit question without already having made every effort
beforehand to eliminate the determination of the essence of man as subjectivity
[Subjektivität] and also as animal rationale? In order at the same time to find
one word for the relationship of be[ing] to the essence of man and for the
essential relation [Wesensverhältnis] of man to the openness ["there [Da]"] of
be[ing] as such, the term "existence [Dasein]" was chosen for that essential
sphere in which man is man. This happened even though the term is also used
by metaphysics for what has come to be called existentia [being]37, actuality
[Wirklichkeit], reality [Realität] and objectivity [Objektivität], and although the
everyday way of speaking [in German] about "menschliche Dasein [human
existence]" makes use of the metaphysical meaning of the word. But every
rethinking [Nach-denken] of it is obstructed, though, if one feels satisfied in
finding out that in Being and Time the word 'existence' is used instead of
37 According to the entry 'essence' in the Oxford English Dictionary (2nd. ed.,
1989), the word 'essentia' is a "fictitious present participle of esse, to be, in
imitation of Greek ∫&<_."
25. 'consciousness [Bewußtsein]'. As if it were here merely a matter of the
employment of a different usage of words, as if it were not about the one and
only [thing that matters]: to bring about thinking through the relationship of
be[ing] to the essence of man and thus, to our way of thinking, [to] above all
[bring about] what is for our leading question an adequate essential experience
of man. 'Existence' neither merely takes the place of the word 'consciousness',
nor does that "thing [Sache]" called "existence" take the place of what we
formulate in the term 'consciousness'. Moreover, what is termed "existence"
should first of all be experienced and consequently then thought of as a "place
[Stelle]," namely, the habitat of the truth of be[ing].
What is thought in the term 'existence' throughout the treatise on Being and Time
is already given in the principle that says: "The 'essence' of existence lies in its life
[Existenz]" (p. 67).38
Admittedly, if one considers that in the language of metaphysics the term
'existence [Existenz]' itself names what 'existence [Dasein]' means, namely, the
actuality of anything that is actual [jedes beliebigen Wirklichen], from God to a
grain of sand, then the difficulty of thinking [des zu Denkende] the principle
when one only casually understands it is displaced from the term "Dasein" onto
38 Being and Time, translated by John Macquarrie and Edward Robinson
(1962) Oxford: Basil Blackwell [= Sein und Zeit, Gesamtausgabe 2, p. 55].
26. the term "Existenz." In Being and Time the word 'life [Existenz]' is used expressly as
the expression for the be[ing] of man. Correctly thought, "life" may be thought
of as the "essence" of existence in whose openness be[ing] manifests and hides
itself, affords and withdraws itself [sich bekündet und verbirgt, gewährt und
entzieht], without the truth of be[ing] exhausting itself in existence or letting itself
be at one with it after the fashion of the metaphysical principle that all
objectivity as such is subjectivity.
What is the meaning of 'life' in Being and Time? The term names a way of
be[ing] [Weise des Seins], in fact the be[ing] of that [kind of] be-ing [Seiende]
which stands open[ly] for the openness of be[ing], within which it stands while it
withstands [aussteht] it. This withstanding [Ausstehen] is gone through in the
name of "sorrow [Sorge]."39 The ecstatic [ekstatische] essence of existence is
thought of as sorrow, just as, conversely, sorrow is experienced adequately only
in the ecstatic essence [of existence]. Experienced in this way, withstanding is
39 "Dieses Ausstehen wird unter dem namen 'Sorge' erfahren." (EWM 374)
Variants: This ek-stasis goes by the name of sorrow. It goes by the name (as an
alias) sorrow. In English translations of Being and Time 'care' has been the alias
of 'sorrow'. For an argument for the translation of 'Sorge' as "sorrow," see the Part
Two of my book Preparatory Thinking in Heidegger's Teaching (1987) New York:
Philosophical Library.
27. here of the essence for thinking ekstasis.40 The ecstatic essence of life is
therefore still inadequately understood when one formulates it only as "standing
beyond"41 and takes the "beyond [Hinaus]" to be an "away from [Weg von]" the
inside [Innern] of an immanence [Immanenz] of consciousness and spirit [Geist],
for so understood life would in this way still be formulated as "subjectivity" and
"substance," while the "out" as what is outside [Auseinander] the openness of
be[ing] itself would have yet to be thought. Strange as it may sound, the stasis42
in the ek-static has its basis in being an instance [Innestehen] of the "out" "there"
[im "Aus" und "Da"] of emergence as which be[ing] itself comes to pass. What is
to be thought by the term 'life' can very beautifully be termed "urgency
[Inständigkeit],"43 if the term is used in thinking to in this way think the truth of
be[ing] and to think it through [ihr denkt aus]. But then in particular we must
40 "Das so erfahrene Ausstehen ist das Wesen der hier zu denkenden Ekstasis."
(EWM 374)
41 Variant: . . . standing apart from . . ..
42 The fundamental meaning of &*6&_( with which Heidegger is working in
this passage is, of course, at play with Ü_&*_&_(. &*6&_( here means one's
position on a matter, while Ü_&*_&_( effects a change of position, changing of
one's mind.
43 Or: "(em)ergency." Existence is nature's emergency situation. To be human
is to be pressed of one's own doing to do things.
28. think the instance of the openness of be[ing], the bearing [Austragen]44 of such
an instance (sorrow), and enduring [Ausdauern] in extremity [im Äußersten]
(be[ing] to the utmost45 [Sein zum Tode])*46 all together [and] at the same time,
and as the complete essence of life.*47
Be-ing in the mode of life is human [be-ing]. Only man exists.48 A rock is, but it
does not exist. A tree is, but it does not exist. A horse is, but it does not exist. An
angel is, but it does not exist. God is, but he does not exist.49 The statement that
44 Or: . . . giving birth to . . ..
45 Or: . . . to the nth degree . . .; that is, to death.
46 *Fifth edition (1949): "Auf sich zu-kommen lassen den Tod, sich halten in der
Ankunft des Todes als des Ge-Birgs des s [to leave it open for death to come to
pass, to hold out for the arrival of death as the salvage of []]." (EWM 374)
47 *Fifth edition (1949): "Wohnen, das 'bauende' [living / dwelling, the
'cultivating' / 'growing']." (EWM 374)
48 Variants: Only man exists. Only the human kind of be-ing exists.
49 "Das Seiende, das in der Weise der Existenz ist, ist der Mensch. Der Mensch
allein existiert. Der Fels ist, aber er existiert nicht. Der Baum ist, aber er existiert
nicht. Das Pferd ist, aber es existiert nicht. Der Engel ist, aber es existiert nicht.
Gott ist, aber er existiert nicht." (EWM 374)
29. "only man exists" in no way means to say that only the human [kind of] be-ing is
real, and thus every other [kind of] be-ing is unreal and only a semblance
[Schein] or idea [Vorstellung] for man. The statement that "man exists" means
that man is the only [kind of] be-ing whose be[ing] is marked by be[ing] as the
outstanding instance [offenstehende Innestehen] of the emergence of
be[ing].50 The*51 existential essence [existentiale Wesen] of man is the basis of
what man can formulate as be-ing of any sort and for what he can be
conscious of that is so formulated. All consciousness presupposes life thought
ecstatically as the essentia of man, where essentia means what man comes to
be insofar as he is man. By contrast, consciousness neither first creates the
openness of be-ing nor first confers on man his being open [Offensein] for be-
ing. Whither and whence and in what open dimension, then, could all
I take the opening sentences of this paragraph to be essential to
understanding Heidegger. The verb 'existieren' is reserved exclusively for the
human kind of be-ing. Forms of 'sein' apply to everything else: things of nature,
things fabricated by human beings, divine things. 'Existenz' is human life, the life
of 'biography', the life that has, makes and is (a) history.
50 Human be-ing is notable "in the eyes of" be[ing]. We who exist, who can
say "we" and therefore "we exist," are marked men, marked by the blaze of
existence.
51 *Fifth edition (1949): "ereignet-gebrauchte [eventful-accustomed]." (EWM
375)
30. intentionality of consciousness move if man were in essence not already
urgency? What else (if anyone has seriously thought about this) could the word
'-sein' mean in the terms 'Bewußtsein' and 'Selbstbewußtsein [self-consciousness]'
except the existential essence of what exists, which is that in which it exists? To
be a self is, of course, the mark of the essence of the be-ing of the sort of thing
that exists, but life neither consists in being a self [Selbstsein]52 nor is itself
determined by this. However, since metaphysical thinking characterizes man's
selfness as a substance, or what is at bottom the same, as subjectivity, the path
that first leads away from metaphysics to the ecstatic-existential essence of man
must get past the metaphysical determination of the selfness of man (Being and
Time §§ 63 and 64).53
52 Or selfness, as below. Some of Heidegger's neologisms ending in '-sein'
seem to have been inspired by the peculiar construction of the noun
'Bewußtsein', which literally means "knownness" or "what is to have been known."
Thus 'Selbstsein' would mean "what is to be itself."
53 These are the sections entitled "Die für eine Interpretation des Seinssinnes
der Sorge gewonnene hermeneutische Situation und der methodische
Charakter der existenzialen Analytik überhaupt [The Kind of Hermeneutic
Situation Reached for the Interpretation of the Sense of Be[ing] and the
Methodological Character of the Existential Analytic in General]" and "Sorge
und Selbstheit [Sorrow and Selfhood]." See Being and Time, pp. 358-370 [= Sein
und Zeit, Gesamtausgabe 2, pp. 411-428].
31. But now because the question about life always stands at the disposal of the
sole question for thinking, namely, the first question has yet to be unfolded about
the truth of be[ing] as the hidden basis of all metaphysics, the title of the treatise
that attempts to get to the bottom of metaphysics is therefore not Life and Time,
or Consciousness and Time, but Being and Time. Nor, however, let us think of the
title as anything like the well-known [pairs] be[ing] and becoming, be[ing] and
semblance,54 be[ing] and thinking, be[ing] and having to [Sollen]. For there
be[ing] is always designated narrowly exactly as if "becoming," "seeming,"
"thinking," and "having to" did not belong to be[ing], even though it is clear they
still are not nothing [nichts] and so belong to be[ing]. In Being and Time, be[ing]
is none other than "time," as long as "time" goes by its "first name [Vorname]"55,
the truth of be[ing], and is thus be[ing] itself. But now why "time" and "be[ing]"?
Thinking about the beginning of the history of be[ing] that reveals itself in the
thinking of the Greeks will show that the Greeks early on experienced the
be[ing] of be-ing as the presence of what is presenting itself [die Answesenheit
des Anwesenden]. If we translate _®___ with 'be', the translation is linguistically
correct, but we merely replace one word [Wortlaut] with another. If we
54 Or: seeming, sembling.
55 The 'Vorname' is the given name of a person. Heidegger here suggests
that "the truth of be[ing]" is the earliest name for time.
32. question ourselves, however, it immediately comes to light that we neither think
_®___ in a Greek way56 nor, correspondingly, think "be" with a clear and
unambiguous determination [Bestimmung]. What do we say, then, when we
say "be" instead of _®___, and _®___ and esse instead of "be"'? We say
nothing.57 The Greek, Latin and German words are all obtuse in the same way.
In our customary usage, we give ourselves away as being merely trendsetters
for the greatest thoughtlessness that has ever gone on in thinking and which
remains in power to this very hour. For _®___ means [to] make present
[anwesen]58. The essence of making present is buried deep in the original name
for be[ing]. For us, however, _®___ and ∫&<_ [(a) being] (as "_$- and t" ,&<_)59
already say the following: in making present, the present and lasting, unthought
and hidden, are at work; time is present. Accordingly, be[ing] as such is born of
time.60 Thus time is referred back to emergence, that is, [to] the truth of be[ing].
56 That is, speaking Greek.
57 "Wir sagen nichts." (EWM 376) Variant: We don't really say anything at all.
58 Or: making a present (gift) of.
59 "_$ ∫&<_ means "presence" (with beings); t" ,&<_ means absence (without
any being).
60 "Sein als solches ist demnach unverborgen aus Zeit." (EWM 374) Variant:
Accordingly, be[ing] as such comes (out) of time / (just) in (the nick of) time.
33. But the time to be thought of now is not experienced in some sort of outcome of
[a kind of] be-ing. Time is obviously of a wholly different nature [Wesen]*61,
which is not merely unthought of so far in the metaphysical concept of time, but
will never be thought in it. Thus time becomes the first name of what still has to
be considered about the truth of be[ing] and experienced for the first time.
Be[ing] is in and of time. Heidegger here implies a neologism 'unverbergen'
used transitively.
61 *Fifth edition (1949): "Zeit ist vierdimensional: Die erste, alles versammelnde
Dimension ist die Nähe [Time is four-dimensional: the first, all-encompassing
dimension is imminence]." (EWM 377) A fifth dimension must be supposed to
provide access to the other four: time, volume, surface, length. Or is this further
dimension coincident with the pre-dimensional point? 'Nähe' means nearness in
time, impendence (with a suggestion of danger), which is contrasted with what
is long ago and far away, distant in time and difficult to regain. These extremes
meet and have their origin for thinking in be[ing].
This Introduction drew out of Heidegger clarifications of a kind that are
rare in his writings, let alone in the notes he made in his copies of his books.
Heidegger's note at this point in the text provides a hint about the importance of
the Introduction among Heidegger's ventures in thinking. A certain frontier is
reached here, the view from which is powerfully evocative.
34. Just as the hidden essence of time says something about the first metaphysical
name for be[ing], so it also says something about its last name: "the eternal
return of the equivalent." In the era [Epoche] of metaphysics*62 the history of
be[ing] is at work in the unthought of essence of time. This time is space, not co-
ordinated, but also not merely ordered [eingeordnet].*63
Any attempt to get from formulating be-ing as such to thinking about the truth
of be[ing] must in a certain way also formulate the truth of be[ing] in every
formulating embarked upon, so that such formulating is necessarily different in
kind from what is to be thought and, as formulating, ultimately inappropriate to
it. The relationship of the truth of be[ing] to human nature [Menschenwesen]
that derives from metaphysics is interpreted as "understanding." But that being
the case, understanding is thought by [aus] the emergence of be[ing]. Inwardly
begotten, it is what is given forth [Entwurf] ecstatically, that is, in the sphere of
the open.*64 The sphere delivered up*65 as open in begetting, by which
62 *Fifth edition (1949): "Diese Epoche ist die ganze Geschichte des Seins [This
era is the whole history of be[ing]]." (EWM 377)
63 *Fifth edition (1949): "Zeit-Raum [time-space]." (EWM 377) That is, space is
not conceived according to the schema of the three geometric co-ordinates.
64 "Es ist der ekstatische, d.h. im Bereich des Offenen innestehende
geworfene Entwurf." (EWM 377)
35. something (in this case be[ing]) turns out to be something (in this case be[ing] as
itself in its emergence), is called sense [Sinn]*66 (cf. Being and Time, pp. 192-
93)67. "Sense of be[ing]" and "truth of be[ing]" speak of the same thing.68
Assuming that time belongs to the truth of be[ing] in an as yet hidden way, then
every begetting that keeps the truth of be[ing] open as the understanding of
*Fifth edition (1949): "Geworfenheit und Ereignis. Werfen, Zu-werfen,
Schicken; Ent-Wurf: dem Wurf entsprechen [begottenness and eventuality.
Begetting, expelling, sending; pro-geny: corresponding to the utterance]." (EWM
377)
65 *Fifth edition (1949): "sich zu-bringt [is brought to]." (EWM 377) That is, in the
way a ship is "brought to" (turned into the wind).
66 *Fifth edition (1949): "Sinn -- Wegrichtung des Sach-Verhalts [sense -- setting
the course of the fact of the matter]." (EWM 377)
67 Sein und Zeit, p. 201. The passage is part of Section 32, "Verstehen und
Auslegung [Understanding and Explanation]." 'Auslegung' is displaying
something, getting it out into the open, delivering oneself of it.
68 "'Sinn von Sein' und 'Wahrheit des Seins' sagen das Selbe." (EWM 377) 'Die
Gleiche' is "the equivalent"; 'das Selbe' is "the same (thing)."
36. be[ing] has to look to time as the possible*69 horizon [möglichen Horizont] of the
understanding of and by be[ing] (cf. Being and Time, §§ 31-34 and 68).70
On the first page of Being and Time the preface of the treatise closes with the
following sentences: "The intention of the following treatise is the concrete
elaboration of the question about the sense of be[ing]. The interpretation of
69 *Fifth edition (1949): "ermöglichen [possibilizing]." (EWM 378)
70 These are the sections entitled "Das Da-sein als Verstehen [Being There as
Understanding]," "Verstehen und Auslegung [Understanding and Explanation],"
"Die Aussage als abkünftiger Modus der Auslegung [The Statement (Proposition)
as the Original Mode of Explanation]," "Da-sein und Rede. Die Sprache [Being
There and Speech. Language]," and "Die Zeitlichkeit der Erschlossenheit
überhaupt. a) Die Zeitlichkeit des Verstehens. (b) Die Zeitlichkeit der
Befindlichkeit. c) Die Zeitlichkeit der Verfallens. d) Die Zeitlichkeit der Rede. [The
Temporality of Openness. a) The Temporality of Understanding. b) The
Temporality of Situatedness. c) The Temporality of Distractedness. d) The
Temporality of Speech]," Being and Time, pp. 182-210, 384-401 [= Sein und Zeit,
pp. 190-221, 444-463]. I have translated 'Da-sein' with "being there" when it is
hyphenated.
37. time as an exposing71 of the possible horizon of any kind of understanding of
be[ing] is its provisional goal."72
Philosophy cannot easily find clearer evidence for the power of the
forgottenness of be[ing], in which all philosophy is immersed and which has at
the same time become and continues to be the fateful claim of thinking in
Being and Time, than the instinctive assurance with which it has by-passed the
only real question of Being and Time. But this is not a question of
misunderstandings regarding a book, but rather of our abandonment of and by
be[ing].
Metaphysics speaks of what be-ing is as be-ing; it offers a _@_ ( (statement
[Aussage]) about Ø_ [be-ing]. The later term "ontology" indicates its essence,
supposing, that is, that we interpret the term according to its own proper
content and not in a narrow scholastic sense. Metaphysics moves in the realm
71 Compared to 'Auslegung', which displays the obvious, 'Interpretation'
exposes what lies hidden in a matter, exhumes it.
72 "Die konkrete Ausarbeitung der Frage nach dem Sinn von 'Sein' ist die
Absicht der folgenden Abhandlung. Die Interpretation der Zeit als des
möglichen Horizontes eines jeden Seinsverständnisses überhaupt ist ihr
vorläufiges Ziel."
38. of ∞_ † Ø_ [be-ing as be-ing]. Its formulating concerns be-ing as be-ing. In this
way, metaphysics always formulates be-ing as such as a whole as the be-
ingness [Seiendheit] of be-ing (the ∫&<_ [presence] of Ø_). But metaphysics
formulates the be-ingness of be-ing in a twofold way: in the first place, as the
entirety [das Ganze] of be-ing as such, in the sense of the most general (∞_
___@_ ,, _ __@_ [be-ing on the whole, what is in common]; and at the same time,
however, as the entirety of be-ing as such, in the sense of the highest and
thereby divine be-ing (∞_ ___@_ ,, t_$@*_* _, __¢ _ [the universal, what is the
furthermost, divinity]). The emergence of be-ing was developed in its twofold
sense especially in the metaphysics of Aristotle (cf. Metaphysics _, _, _).
Because it makes be-ing as be-ing an idea, metaphysics in itself is in fact two-in-
one: the truth of be-ing in the most general sense and in the highest sense. In its
essence it is ontology, in the narrower [scholastic] sense, and theology. This
onto-theological essence of authentic philosophy ("$F*_ .__ & .<_73) must indeed
be accounted for by the way it brings Ø_, that is, as Ø_, out into the open. The
theological character of ontology is not due so much to the fact that Greek
metaphysics was later absorbed by Christian sacred theology and transformed
by it. It is due more to the means by which be-ing as be-ing had disclosed itself
[sich entborgen hat] from early on. That emergence of be-ing first made it
possible for Greek philosophy to overpower Christian theology, whether to its
73 First philosophy or philosophy in the primary sense.
39. benefit or detriment may be decided by theologians of the Christian experience
as they consider what is written in the apostle Paul's first letter to the Corinthians:
∫0° Ö_F$____ ± __≠( *ã_ & .<__ * ∑ _@&_ ,P (1 Cor. 1:20): "Has not God let the
wisdom of this world become foolishness?"74 But the & .<__ * ∑ _@&_ ,P [wisdom
of this world] is that which, according to 1:22, what the ^______( __* ∑&__, the
Greeks are searching for. Aristotle even expressly calls "$F*_ .__ & .<_ [authentic
philosophy] __* ,_8__, what is sought [die gesuchte]. What if Christian theology
were to decide to take seriously the words of the apostle just for once and so
also the foolishness of philosophy?
Metaphysics as the truth of be-ing as such takes on two forms. But the basis of its
dual form and indeed its origin remain closed off to metaphysics, though not
accidentally or as the result of an omission. Metaphysics accepts this dual form
since it is what it is: the formulating of be-ing as be-ing. Metaphysics has no
choice. It is excluded by its own nature as metaphysics from the experience of
be[ing], for be-ing (Ø_), as formulated by metaphysics, always formulates
nothing but what has already been indicated as be-ing († Ø_). But metaphysics
74 "Hat nicht zur Torheit werden lassen der Gott die Weisheit der Welt?" (EWM
379)
40. never even pays attention to what has been hidden in this Ø_, insofar as it has
been allowed to come out [unverborgen].75
And so the time necessarily came to think over [nachdenken] what is actually
said about Ø_ by the word 'be-ing [seiend]'. Accordingly, the question about
Ø_ took deeper root [wieder geholt] in thinking (cf. the preface to Being and
Time). But such repeating [Widerholen] does not merely parrot the Platonic-
Aristotelian question, but rather asks in return [fragen zurück] what is in hiding in
Ø_.*76
75 'Verbergen' means "to hide," used either intransitively (hiding oneself,
going into hiding) or transitively (concealing something from view). Taken
intransitively, the state of being in hiding is seclusion [Verborgenheit]. Coming
out of seclusion is expressed by the neologism 'unverbergen' and translated as
"(to) emerge." In this passage, a form of the verb 'unverbergen' is being used
transitively and in the passive mood. Thus, one is brought out of seclusion. So it is
in the case of any sort of be-ing, which is brought out of seclusion thanks to
be[ing], not by virtue of its be-ing.
76 *Fifth edition (1949): "der Unterschied [the difference]." (EWM 380)
The question "What is metaphysics?" asks a "backwards" question. Many
of those who heard the lecture in 1929 surely wondered why the question had
41. Metaphysics continues to be founded on what is hidden [das Verborgene] in
Ø_, even when its formulating is devoted to ∞_ † Ø_ [be-ing as be-ing]. Inquiring
in [re]turn [Zurückfragen] [in]to what, from the point of view of metaphysics, is
hidden searches about for the foundation [Fundament] of ontology. That is why
the procedure in Being and Time (p. 34)77 is called "fundamental ontology." But
in this case, as with every such term, the nomenclature proves from the start to
be unfortunate. It says something correct about metaphysics as it is understood
here, yet for that very reason leads to error, for it is out to accomplish in thinking
the transition from metaphysics to the truth of be[ing]. As long as such thinking
about the truth of be[ing] is described only as fundamental ontology, the
designation gets in its own way and obscures it. Of course, the term
"fundamental ontology" suggests the view that thinking which attempts to think
the truth of be[ing] and not, like all ontology, the truth of be-ing, is even as
fundamental ontology still a kind [Art] of ontology. Meanwhile, thinking of the
truth of be[ing] as getting to the bottom of metaphysics has with the first step it
takes already abandoned the sphere of all ontology. By comparison, all
philosophy that turns on a straightforward or indirect formulating of
"transcendence" necessarily remains ontology in an essential sense, whether it
been raised at all. Moreover, the lecture "answers" the question raised in the title
with another question, What is be[ing]?
77 Sein und Zeit, p. 18. The text of Wegmarken cites p. 13.
42. wants to effect a laying of the foundation of metaphysics or to assure us that it
rejects ontology as a conceptual freezing of living [Erleben].
Indeed, if thinking that now attempts to think the truth of be[ing] gets caught up
in formulating because of a long habit of formulating be-ing, then as a first
consideration as well as occasion for the transition from formulating to
recollective [andenkende] thinking, probably nothing is more necessary than
the question, "What is metaphysics?"
For its own part, the unfolding of this question in the following lecture concludes
with a question. It is called the basic question of metaphysics and goes: Why
be-ing, after all, and not rather no-thing?78 Since then, much has been said
back and forth about the dread and no-thing which are spoken about in the
lecture. But it has not yet occurred to people to think over [überliegen] why a
lecture that attempts to think from thinking of the truth of be[ing] to [thinking] of
no-thing, and from there to the essence of metaphysics, claims that the question
just given is the basic question of metaphysics. For the attentive listener, isn't
there really something to be voiced that must be weightier than all the
enthusiasm about dread and no-thing? The final question confronts us with the
consideration that reflection which attempts to think of a way beyond no-thing
78 "Warum ist überhaupt Seiendes und nicht vielmehr Nichts?" (EWM 381)
Variant: Why is there any kind of be-ing and not no-thing instead?
43. to be[ing] in the end returns once again to a question about be-ing. Inasmuch
as this question, in being introduced with Why?, asks causally in the
conventional way of metaphysics, thinking of be[ing] is completely disavowed in
favor of formulating knowledge about be-ing from [aus] be-ing. To top it all off,
the final question is obviously the question that the metaphysician Leibniz put in
his Principes de la Nature et de la Grâce (Fondé en Raison) [Principles of Nature
and Grace (Based on Reason)]: "Pourquoi il y a plûtot quelque chose que
rien?"79
Does the lecture thus fall behind in its proper intention, which is possible after all
given the difficulty of the transition from metaphysics to the other [way of]
thinking? In the end, does it with Leibniz*80 ask the metaphysical question about
the supreme cause of all actual things [seienden Sachen]? Why, then, is
Leibniz's name not mentioned, which no doubt would be proper?
Or is the question asked in a wholly different sense? If it does not inquire about
be-ing and ascertain the first actual cause of it, then the question must start out
79 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Leibniz: Die philosophischen Schriften, edited by
C.I. Gerhardt (Berlin, 1875-90), Volume VI, p. 607, n.7. Heidegger omits the
phrase "based on reason" in Leibniz's title. The work was written in 1714, though
not published by the author.
80 *Fifth edition (1949): "und Schelling [and Schelling]." (EWM 382)
44. from that which is not be-ing [was nicht das Seiende ist]. That is what the
question speaks of, and it capitalizes it [das Nichts], which the lecture has
considered as its only theme. The requirement is obviously to think through the
end of the lecture for once from within its own and always leading perspective.
That which is called the basic question of metaphysics would be consummated
then in a fundamental-ontological way in a question from the very ground [aus
dem Grunde] of metaphysics and as a question about this ground.
But granted that, at its conclusion, the lecture is on course to what concerns it,
how then should we understand the question?
It runs: Why be-ing, after all, and not rather no-thing? Assuming that we no
longer think metaphysically in the customary way of metaphysics, but rather
from [aus] the essence and truth of metaphysics to the truth of be[ing], it may
now also be asked: How does it happen that be-ing always has the right of way
and takes advantage on its own of every "is," while that which is not [an
instance of] be-ing, that no-thing so understood as be[ing] itself, remains
forgotten? How does it happen that it [Es]*81 can really come of be[ing]*82 and
81 *Fifth edition (1949): "für die Metaphysik [for metaphysics]." (EWM 382) That
is, what is, for metaphysics, no-thing. This is the "es" of "es gibt."
82 Fifth edition (1949): "als solchen [as such]." (EWM 382) See the next note.
45. no-thing is not actually present [nicht west]?83 Is it because of this that all
metaphysics makes it appear inconcussible that "be[ing]" goes without saying84
and therefore no-thing looks like be-ing?85 That is indeed the way it is with
be[ing] and no-thing. Were it otherwise, then Leibniz could not have said in the
same place by way of clarification: "Car le rien est plus simple et plus facile que
quelque chose."86
83 "Woher kommt es, daß Es mit dem Sein eigentlich nichts ist und das Nichts
eigentlich nicht west?" (EWM 382) This is certainly the climactic question of the
essay. Variant: How does it happen that nothing comes of be[ing] / it is actually
nothing to be and no-thing does not come to be? It seems to me that
Heidegger's usage of 'Sein' here justifies my translation of the word throughout as
'be'.
84 That is, that the word 'Sein' is unspoken in every articulation of any kind of
be-ing. Be[ing] is taken for granted in be-ing.
85 "Kommt gar von hier der unerschütterte Anschein in alle Metaphysik, daß
sich 'Sein' von selbst verstehe und daß sich demzufolge das Nichts leichter
mache als Seiende?" (EWM 382)
86 "Since nothing is simpler and easier than something."
46. Which is more puzzling: this, that be-ing is; or this, that be[ing] "is"?87 Or in this
reflection do we not also already approach the vicinity [Nähe] of the riddle that
has eventuated sich ereignet]*88 with the be[ing] of*89 be-ing?
But whatever the answer may be, in the meantime the time should have
become riper to think through the much beleaguered lecture "What Is
Metaphysics?" for once from its conclusion, from its end, not from an imaginary
one.
87 "Was bleibt rätselhafter, dies, daß Seiendes ist, oder dies, daß Sein 'ist'?"
(EWM 383)
88 Variant: . . . has come to pass . . ..
*Fifth edition (1949): "Ereignis der Vergessenheit des Unterschieds [the
eventuality of the forgottenness of the difference]." (EWM 383)
89 *Fifth edition (1949): "der Unterschied [the difference]." (EWM 383)
47. WHAT IS METAPHYSICS? (1929)
"What is metaphysics?" The question leads one to expect talk about
metaphysics. We will forgo that. Instead we will elucidate a definite
metaphysical question. In this way, it seems, we will be placed in the midst of
metaphysics. Only thus will we make it really possible for metaphysics to explain
itself.
Our task begins by presenting a metaphysical question, goes on to elaborate
the question, and ends with its answer.
The Presentation of a Metaphysical Question
According to Hegel, philosophy is from the point of view of good common sense
"the world turned upside down."90 The peculiarity of our undertaking therefore
90 "Die Philosophie ist ihrer Natur nach etwas esoterisches, für sich weder für
den Pöbel gemacht, noch einer Zubereitung für den Pöbel fähig; sie ist nur
dadurch Philosophie daß sie dem Verstande, und damit noch mehr dem
gesunden Menschenverstande, worunter man die lokale und temporäre
48. requires some preparatory remarks. This results from the twofold character of
metaphysical questions.
First, every metaphysical question always grasps the whole of the problematic of
metaphysics. In every case it is the whole itself. Furthermore, every
metaphysical question can only be asked in such a way that the one doing the
questioning, such as he is, is there (in) the question, that is, is put into question.
From this we take the following directive: a metaphysical question must be put
in its entirety and from the essential position of (the) questioning existence [des
fragenden Daseins]. We, here and now, question on our own behalf. Our
existence in the community of scholars, teachers and students is determined by
Beschränktheit eines Geschlechts der Menschen versteht, gerade
entgegengesetzt ist; im Verhähltniß zu diesem ist an und für sich die Welt der
Philosophie eine verkehrte." G.W.F. Hegel, "Einleitung. Über das Wesen der
philosophischen Kritik überhaupt, und ihr Verhältnis zum gegenwärtigen Zustand
der Philosophie insbesonderes[ Introduction. On the Essence of Philosophical
Criticism in General, and its Relation to the Present State of Philosophy in
Particular]" (1802), in Hegel's Gesammelte Werke, edited by Hartmut Buchner
and Otto Pöggeler (Hamburg: Meiner, 1968) IV, p. 124-25. The text is Hegel's
general introduction to the Critical Journal of Philosophy which he and Schelling
edited.
49. science. What is really happening to us at the heart [im Grunde] of our
existence, now that science has become our passion?
The fields of science are widely separated from each other. Their ways of
dealing with the objects they inquiry about are fundamentally different. In our
time such dissociated diversity of disciplines is held together only thanks to the
technical organization of the universities and their faculties, and is given
meaning by establishing a common practical aim for the various departments.
But, as a result, close contact among the sciences in their essential common
ground has died off.
And yet—in all the sciences, when we follow their own most proper aim we
relate ourselves to be-ing itself. Precisely from the point of view of science, no
field takes precedence over the others, neither nature over history nor vice
versa. No one method of dealing with objects dominates the others.
Mathematical knowledge is no stricter than philological-historical knowledge. It
merely has the character of "exactness," which is not the same as strictness. To
demand exactness of the study of history goes against the specific strictness of
the humanities [Geisteswissenschaften]. The relationship [Bezug] to the world
prevailing in all the sciences as such allows them to look for be-ing itself with a
view to making it an object of investigation and substantiating definition
according to its whatness [Wasgehalt] and mode of being [Seinsart]. The idea is
50. that the sciences effect a rapprochement [In-die-Nähe-kommen] with the
essential [Wesentlichen] in all things [Dinge].
This distinctive relationship of the world to be-ing itself is borne out and guided
by a freely adopted attitude [Haltung] of human life [meschlichen Existenz]. To
be sure, man's prescientific and extra-scientific dealings are also related to be-
ing. But science is distinctive in that, in its own way, it lets the matter itself [die
Sache selbst] explicitly and solely have the last word. With such objectivity
[Sachlichkeit] of questioning, defining and substantiating, a certain limited
submission to be-ing itself is effected, so that it can thereby itself. This submissive
position taken by research and teaching comes to be the basis of the possibility
of a unique, though limited kind of guiding influence on the entirety of human
life. The particular relationship of science to the world and the guiding attitude
of man within it can be fully conceptualized, of course, only when we see and
grasp what happens in a relationship to the world attained in this way. Man—
one [kind of] be-ing among others—"pursues the sciences." In this "pursuit"
nothing less happens than the disruption by one be-ing, called man, of the
entirety of be-ing, so that in and through this disruption be-ing thereby gives over
what and how it is. In its own way, this eruptive disruption helps be-ing first come
into its own.
51. In its radical unity, this trinality—relationship to the world, attitude, invasion—
brings an enlivening simplicity and keenness to existence [Da-sein]91 in the life of
science [wissenschaftliche Existenz]. If we expressly take over for ourselves such
an enlightened scientific existence [Da-sein], then we must say:
That to which the relationship to the world refers is be-ing itself—and nothing
more [und sonst nichts].92,*93
91 'Da-sein' (hyphenated) stresses the being there of existence and will be
translated as "being there." This instance and the next occurrence of 'Da-sein'
are exceptions.
92 "Worauf der Weltbezug geht, ist das Seiende selbst -- und sonst nichts."
(WM 105) Variant: The relationship to the world extends to be-ing -- and nothing
else besides.
93 *First edition (1929): "Man hat diesen Zusatz hinter dem Gedankenstrich als
willkürlich und künstlich ausgegeben und weiß nicht, daß Taine, der als Vertreter
und Zeichen eines ganzen, noch herrschenden Zeitalters genommen werden
kann, wissentlich diese Formel zur Kennzeichnung seiner Grundstellung und
Absicht gebraucht [The addition after the hyphen may seem arbitrary and
artificial without knowing that Taine, who can be called the representative and
symbol of the whole of the still prevailing era, knowingly used this formula as the
characterization of his starting point and purpose]." (WM 105) Hippolyte-
52. That from which any attitude takes its direction is be-ing itself—and more than
that, nothing [und weiter nichts].
That which scholarly discussion effects with its disruption is be-ing itself—and
above and beyond that, nothing [und darüber hinaus nichts].
But it is remarkable that just when scientific man makes sure of what is most his
own, he speaks of something else. Only be-ing is supposed to be studied, and
besides that—nothing; only be-ing, and more than that—nothing; solely be-ing,
and beyond that—nothing.
How do things stand with this no-thing [Nichts]?94 Is it an accident that we
speak quite automatically in this way? Is it then only a manner of speaking—
and nothing more?
Adolphe Taine (1828-1893), philosopher and "psychologist," was one of the
leading lights of positivism in France and an influence, for example, on Jean
Piaget's genetic epistemology and, indirectly, on contemporary cognitive
psychology.
94 I have translated 'das Nichts' as no-thing (hyphenated) to reflect
Heidegger's point that 'das Nichts' is the absence of any effective actuality (be-
53. ing) of any kind whatsoever. No thing of any sort can be detected. This
contrasts with 'das Seiende' (be-ing) in all its various modes.
Here begins a proliferation of terms used by Heidegger in his discussion of
no-thing. Some are in common use in German, some have technical
resonances in the literature of philosophy, and some are Heidegger's neologisms
(marked with an *). Occasionally, an English neologism (marked **) has been
required. The terms and their place of first appearance in the text are as follows:
the pronoun 'nichts' [nothing, nothing (at all)] (105) and its related noun *'das
Nichts' [no-thing] (105); the noun *'das Nicht' [the not] (108); the verb *'nichten'
[to nihilate] (114), its related present participle and adjective *'nichtend'
[nihilating] (114), and the nouns *'die Nichtung' [nihilation] (114) and 'das
Nichten' [nihilating] (115); the noun *'das Nichthaft' [the not-like] (108), based on
an implied neologism, the adjective *'nichthaft'; the verb 'vernichten' [to
annihilate] (113) and the noun 'die Vernichtung' [annihilation] (113); two
composite nouns 'das Nicht-Seiende' [what is not be-ing; i.e. what is other than
one kind of be-ing or another] (108) and 'das Nichtseiend' [not-be-ing; i.e. what
is not at the time be-ing] (119); the nouns *'das Nichtige' [the null and void] (106)
and 'die Nichtigkeit' [nullity] (119) (from the adjective 'nichtig' [null, invalid,
void]); the verb 'verneinen' [to negate] (109), its past participle 'verneint'
[negated] (109) and related adjective 'verneinend' [negative, negating] (113),
based on the present participle of 'verneinen', and five related nouns: 'die
Verneinung' [negation, in the sense of what is accomplished by placing a
54. But why do we trouble ourselves about this no-thing? In fact, no-thing is indeed
turned away by science and given up [on] as the null and void [das Nichtige].
But if we give up no-thing in such a way, do we not indeed accept it? But can
we talk about an acceptance if we accept nothing [nichts]? Yet maybe all this
back and forth has already turned into empty verbal wrangling. Science must
then renew its seriousness and assert its soberness in opposition to this, so that it
has only to do with be-ing [um das Seiende geht]. No-thing—what can it be for
science except a horror and a phantasm? If science is right, then one thing is
for certain: science wants to know nothing of no-thing [vom Nichts nichts
wissen]. In the end, this is the scientifically strict comprehension of no-thing. We
know it in wanting to know nothing about the no-thing.95
negative sign in front of a term in symbolic logic or mathematics)] (107), *'das
Verneint' [the negated, the **negatived] (108), *'die Verneintheit' [negativity]
108), *'das Zu-verneinend' [what is do the negating] (116), and 'das Verneinen'
[negating] (117); the noun *'das Verneinbar' [the **negatable], based on a
neologism, the adjective 'verneinbar' [**negatable] (116); the adverb 'nein' ['no']
used as an interjection (118), and its related noun *'das Nein' [the No] (117); and
the adverb 'kein' [no, none, or not any] (112).
95 "Wir wissen es, indem wir von ihm, dem Nichts, nichts wissen wollen." (WM
106)
55. Science wants to know nothing of no-thing. But even so it is nonetheless certain
that, when it attempts to talk about its own essence [Wesen],*96 it calls on no-
thing for help. It claims for its own what it has rejected. What sort of
conflicted*97 essence unveils itself here?
Reflection on our present life [augenblickliche Existenz] as one determined by
science finds us in the midst of a conflict. In the dispute a question has already
presented itself. The question merely needs to be articulated. How do things
stand with no-thing?
The Elaboration of the Question
The development of the question about no-thing must put us in the position to
be clear about whether it is possible or impossible to answer this question. No-
96 *Fifth edition (1949): "die positive and ausschließlich Haltung zum Seienden
[the positive and exclusive attitude toward be-ing]." (WM 106)
97 *Third edition (1931): "ontologische Differenz [ontological difference]." (WM
106)
*Fifth edition (1949): "Nichts als 'Sein' [no-thing as 'be(ing)]'." (WM 106)
56. thing has been admitted. With overweening indifference toward it, science
commends it as what "is not [a] given."98
All the same, we will try to speak about no-thing. What is no-thing? Our first
approach to this question already shows us something unusual about it. From
the outset in asking this question we posit no-thing as something that "is" such
and such, as be-ing. But plainly it has in fact been distinguished from just that.*99
The question about no-thing—what and how it, no-thing, is—turns what is being
questioned into its opposite. The question robs itself of its own object.
Accordingly, every answer to this question is impossible from the outset. For it
necessarily starts out in the form: no-thing "is" this or that. Question and answer
alike are themselves just as nonsensical with respect to no-thing.
But such a dismissal doesn't have to come from science. The commonly
referred to ground rule of all thinking (the principle of avoiding contradiction),
98 "Die Wissenschaft gibt es, mit einer überlegenen Gleichgültigkeit gegen es,
preis als das, was 'es nicht gibt'." (WM 107)
99 *Fifth edition (1949): "der Unterschied, die Differenz [the distinction, the
difference]." (WM 107) 'Unterschied' also refers to the difference in a subtraction
problem. 'Differenz' may also mean difference of opinion or discrepancy
(implying error).
57. everyday "logic" puts down [niederschlagen] this question. For thinking, which in
essence is always thinking about something [etwas], would be working against
its own nature in thinking about no-thing.
Because we keep on failing to make no-thing as such into an object
[Gegenstand], we have already come to the end of our question about no-
thing, on the assumption that "logic"*100 is the highest authority on this question,
that the intellect [Verstand] is the means and thinking the way to grasp no-thing
in an original way and to decide about its disclosure [Enthüllung].
But can the rule of "logic" be challenged? Isn't the intellect really lord and
master in this question about no-thing? After all, only with its help can we
determine no-thing at all and formulate it as a problem, even if only as one that
eliminates itself.101 For no-thing is the negation [Verneinung]102 of the generality
100 *First edition (1929): "d.h. Logik im gewöhnlichen Sinne, was man so dafür
nimmt [that is, logic in the usual sense that one uses the term]." (WM 107)
101 "Nur mit seiner Hilfe können wir doch überhaupt nur das Nichts
betstimmen und als ein wenn auch nur sich selbst verzehrendes Problem
ansetzen." (WM 107)
102 This sense of negation is exemplified by what the negative sign does in
mathematics.
58. [Allheit] of be-ing, simply not be-ing [das schlechthin Nicht-Seiende]. Yet with
that we subsume no-thing under the higher determination of the not-like [das
Nichthaft] and therewith, so it seems, the negated [das Verneint]. But under the
ruling and never challenged doctrine of "logic," negation [Verneinung] is a
specific mental act. How then can we with the question of no-thing, and
indeed with the question about its questionability, hope to bid adieu to the
intellect? Are we that certain about what we presuppose here? Does the not
[das Nicht], negativity [die Verneintheit], and hence negation have about it a
higher determination under which no-thing, as a particular species of the
negated, falls? Is there no-thing only because there is the not, i.e., negation?
Or is it the other way around? Is there negation and the not only because there
is no-thing?103 This has not been decided; indeed not once has the question
been expressly raised. We maintain that no-thing is more original*104 than the
not and negation.
103 "Gibt es das Nichts nur, weil es das Nicht, d.h. die Verneinung gibt? Oder
liegt es umgekehrt? Gibt es die Verneinung und das Nicht nur, weil es das Nichts
gibt?" (WM 108)
104 *Fifth edition (1949): "Ursprungsordnung [(in the) order of origin or
origination]." (WM 108)
59. If our thesis is correct, then the possibility of negation as a mental act, and
therewith the intellect itself, depends in some way upon no-thing. What hope is
there then to decide about this? Does the seeming absurdity of the question
and answer regarding no-thing rest solely on the blind single-mindedness*105 of
our far-ranging intellect?
However, if we do not allow ourselves to be led astray by the formal impossibility
of the question about no-thing and still confront the question, we must then at
the very least satisfy what is still as the basic requirement of the possible
development of any question. If no-thing is to be questioned in the way
questioning works, then it must itself be given in advance. We must be able to
encounter it.
How do we go after [suchen] no-thing? How do we find no-thing? In order to
find something [etwas], must we not already know that it is there [daß es da ist]
at all? Indeed! First and foremost, a person is able to look for something only if
he has already anticipated the actual presence [Vorhandensein] of what is
105 *Fifth edition (1949): "die blinde Eigensinnigkeit: die certitudo des ego
cogito, Subjektivität [blind single-mindedness: the certainty of the I think,
subjectivity]." (WM 108)
60. being sought [das Gesuchte].106 But what is sought here is no-thing. In the end,
is there [gibt es] seeking without some anticipation, a seeking to which a proper
finding belongs?
Be that as it may, we know no-thing even if only as that which we casually talk
about day in and day out. Without further ado, we can work out a "definition"
of this pale no-thing, which in all the colorlessness of self-evidence so
inconspicuously hangs around our talk:
No-thing is the complete negation of the generality of be-ing. In the end, isn't
this characteristic of no-thing a sign of the only direction from which it can
encounter us?
Generality of be-ing must be given beforehand in order to be made invalid
[verfallen zu können] as such by negation, in which no-thing itself then must
manifest [bekunden] itself.
But even if we ignore the questionability of the relation between negation and
no-thing, how should we as finite essences, make the whole of be-ing in its
106 "Zunächst und zumeist vermag der Mensch nur dann zu suchen, wenn er
has Vorhandensein des Gesuchten vorweggenommen hat." (WM 109)
61. generality accessible in itself and to ourselves in particular [zumal]?107 If need
be, we can think of the whole of be-ing as an "idea [Idee]," and then negate
what has been thus thought up and "think" of it as negated. In this way we do
reach the formal concept of a "thought up" [eingebildeten] no-thing, but never
no-thing itself.108 But no-thing is nothing,109 and no difference can prevail
between the thought up no-thing and "real [eigentlich]" no-thing, unless no-
thing represents something other than the complete absence of difference
[Unterschiedslösigkeit].110 But "real" no-thing itself, isn't it once again that
concealed and absurd concept of an actual no-thing [eines seienden
Nichts]?111 For one last time now the objections of our intellect would call a halt
to our search, the legitimacy of which can be demonstrated only through a
fundamental experience [Grunderfahrung] of no-thing.
107 'Zumal' also means "at the same time."
108 The "thought up" is in one sense the imaginary. The point is, we can never
imagine away everything.
109 "Aber das Nichts ist nichts . . .." (WM 109)
110 'Unterschiedslösigkeit' also means indifference, the condition of having
lost all capacity for making (a) difference or for making differentiations.
111 Here Heidegger is pointing to the patent [seienden] latency [Nichts] of
anything whatsoever.
62. As surely as we never get a sure grasp of the generality of be-ing in itself, just as
surely do we all the same find ourselves somehow placed in the midst of the
generality of bare [enthüllt] be-ing. In the end, there continues to be [besteht]
an essential difference between getting a grasp of the whole of be-ing in itself
and finding oneself in the midst of be-ing as a whole [des Seienden im
Ganzen].112 The former is impossible in principle. The latter happens all the time
in our existence. Of course, it looks just as though in our everyday comings and
goings we were holding fast to only just this or that [kind of] be-ing, as though
we were lost in this or that realm of be-ing. But no matter how fragmented the
daily round may seem, it always maintains be-ing in the unity of a "whole
[Ganzes]," although only in the shadows.113 Even then and precisely just then,
when we are not especially busy with things114, this "as a whole"115 overcomes
us; for example, in genuine boredom. This is a long way off far off when this or
112 The fundamental sense of "das Seiende im Ganzen" seems to be "be-ing
at all."
113 This is the unity of what is simultaneously minimally ("at all") and maximally
("all") delimited.
114 The sense here is of when we are whiling away the time, fooling around,
tinkering about.
115 This is the "at all" of "being at all."
63. that book or play, job or leisure activity,116 is boring [langeweilt]. It breaks out
when "it's boring [es einem langweileg ist]." Profound boredom, like a silent fog
insinuating itself in the depths of existence, pulls things, others and oneself into it
altogether with remarkable indifference. Such boredom reveals be-ing as a
whole.
Another possibility of such revelation [Offenbarung] lies concealed in our joy in
the present [Gegenwart]117 [of the] existence, not merely the person, of
someone we love.
Being attuned in such a way that we "are" one way or another, we find
ourselves [befinden] in the midst of be-ing as a whole being attuned by it. Not
only does the situatedness [Befindlichkeit]118 of mood disclose be-ing as a whole
116 Today Heidegger would likely have referred to watching television,
playing video games, or passing the time with other such diversions.
117 'Gegenwart' actually means "the present" (in contrast with "the past" and
"the future") or the grammatical "present tense." This is a telling usage.
Heidegger here points to the coincidence of tense and temporal mode in
existence. He refers in the same way to no-thing (WM 112).
118 Finding ourselves at all means finding ourselves somewhere, in a particular
place, as 0F$_.
64. in its own way, but this disclosing, far from being a mere incident, is at the same
time the fundamental event [Grundgeschehen] of our being there.
What we call our "feelings [Gefühle]," then, are neither the fleeting concomitant
[Begleiterscheinung]119 of our thinking and willing behavior, nor a mere causal
impetus to such, nor even an actually present condition [vorhandener Zustand]
with which we have to come to terms in some way.
Yet just when moods in such a way bring be-ing as a whole before us, they hide
from us the no-thing we are looking for. We are then even less of the opinion
that the negation of be-ing as a whole revealed in mood puts no-thing before
us. Accordingly, that sort of thing could happen to begin with [ursprünglich]120
only in a mood that reveals no-thing in the most proper sense of disclosing it.
Does such being attuned in which no-thing itself is brought before us happen in
human existence [im Dasein des Menschen]?
119 'Begleiterscheinung' may also mean "side-effect."
120 'Ursprünglich' also means originatively, in a way that occasions or
originates the event in question.
65. This event is possible and happens, though only rarely and only for an instant, in
the fundamental mood of dread [Angst]. In this sense, dread does not refer to
the regularly occurring anxiety [Ängstlichkeit] that has its source in the
fearfulness [Furchtsamkeit] that so easily appears in us. Dread is fundamentally
different from fear [Furcht]. We are afraid of this or that determinate [kind of]
be-ing which threatens us in this or that regard. Fear of . . . is also in every case
being afraid of something determinate [etwas Bestimmtes]. Since fear has
about it the limitation of an "of what" and "about what," the frightening and
frightful become bound by that in which one finds himself. In striving to save
himself from it, from this determinate [something], one becomes unsure of
himself with regard to everything else, that is, "in a panic" about everything.
Dread does not give rise to such confusion. On the contrary, an odd calm
pervades it. Dread is indeed always dread of . . ., but not of this or that. Dread
of . . . is always dread about . . ., but not about this or that. The indeterminacy of
and about what we are in dread is not some sort of failure of determinacy, but
rather the essential impossibility of determinacy. This is illustrated by the following
familiar explanation.
In dread, as we say, "something is uncanny [ist es einem unheimlich]." What do
we mean by "something" and "is"? We cannot say what the uncanny something
66. is about. There is something like this about the "as a whole [im Ganzen]"121: all
things [Dinge] and we ourselves sink into indifference.*122 Not in the sense of
merely disappearing, but rather, in its very moving away [Wegrücken], it turns to
us. This moving away of be-ing as a whole that closes in on [umdrängt] us in
dread pressures [bedrängt] us.123 There's nothing to get a hold on.124 All that
remains and comes over us in the slipping away of be-ing is this "no [kein]."
Dread reveals no-thing.
121 "Im Ganzen ist einem so." (WM 111) Variant: There is also something of this
about the "at all" (as in "be-ing at all").
122 *Fifth edition (1949): "das Seiende spricht nicht mehr an [be-ing no longer
appeals to this]."
123 In the following lines, Heidegger plays off the verbs 'bedrängen' (to
pressure, in the sense of forcing someone's hand), 'umdrängen' (to close in on
the way a storm approaches), and 'andrängen' (to play against, the way actors
"play off" one another on stage).
124 "Es bleibt kein Halt." (WM 112) Variant: There's no getting a hold on
anything.
67. We are "suspended [schweben]" in dread.125 More clearly, dread leaves us
hanging because it brings on the slipping away of be-ing. So it is that we actual
human beings [seienden Menschen]*126 slip away [mitentgleiten] from ourselves
in the midst of be-ing. For at bottom this is not uncanny to you or me, but rather
"it" is like that. In the shuddering [Durchschütterung] of this suspense
[Schweben], where one can hold on to nothing [nichts], only really being there
[das reine Da-sein] remains.*127
125 Variant: We are "at sea" in dread.
126 The play is on the convertibility of the expressions "human being" and "be-
ing human," in which be-ing means effective actuality.
*Fifth edition (1949): "aber nicht der Mensch als Mensch 'des' Da-sein [but
not man a man 'in' existence]." (WM 112) Heidegger is not speaking of the
"human (being)" (man or woman) understood as somehow the result (therefore,
a "finished" being) of being there at all [Da-sein]. The additional play here is on
'Dasein' [existence], 'Da-sein' [(the emphatic state of) being there], and the verb
'da-sein' [to be there].
127 All that remains is pure, unalloyed being there. Variant: Here, in the
shuddering of such suspense, where there is no thing of any kind to hold on to,
there remains only / nothing other than pure being there.
68. Dread strikes us dumb.128 Because be-ing as a whole slips away and
straightaway no-thing rushes in, every saying "Is" [jedes "Ist"-Sagen] about it is
silent in the face of it. That in the uncanniness of dread we even often attempt
to break the empty stillness with random chatter is only proof of [the] present
[Gegenwart] [of] no-thing. That dread discloses no-thing is then immediately
confirmed when dread has eased off. In light of what we had just seen while it
was still fresh in our memory, we are forced to say that that about and of which
we were in dread was "really [eigentlich]" nothing at all [nichts]. Indeed, no-
thing itself, as such, was there.*129
*Fifth edition (1949): "das Da-sein 'im' Mensch [the being there 'of' man]."
The point is that existence belongs only to human beings. See the Introduction
to the address.
128 "Die Angst verschlägt uns das Wort." (WM 112) Variant: Dread leaves us
speechless (with nothing to say, without words to express ourselves).
129 "In der Tat: das Nichts selbst -- als solche -- war da." (WM 112)
*Fifth edition (1949): "heißt: enthüllte sich; Entbergung und Stimmung [that
is to say, discloses itself; opening up and mood]." 'Entbergung' is a neologism
with allusions to confessing, letting one's real "feelings" show through, opening
up, letting go.
69. In the fundamental mood of dread we have reached the event of existence in
which no-thing is made manifest and in which it must be questioned.130
How do things stand with no-thing?
The Answer to the Question
We have already initially given what, for our purposes, is the only essential
answer to our question, if we take care that the question about no-thing has
actually been posed. For this demands that we carry out the conversion of
man*131 into his being there [des Menschen in sein Da-sein], which every
instance of dread occasions in us, in order to apprehend no-thing, which is
130 In dread, we have caught up with existence and see it as it first comes to
pass.
131 *Fifth edition (1949): "als Subjekt! Da-sein aber schon denkend heir
vorerfahren, nur deshalb die Frage "Was ist Metaphysik?" hier fragbar geworden
[as subject! Only by thinking of being there as already having been
experienced beforehand has the question "What Is Metaphysics?" become
questionable]." (WM 113)
70. obvious in it*132 as it manifests itself. At the same time the demand finally comes
to ward off characterizations of no-thing that have not arisen from what is being
claimed here.
No-thing discloses itself in dread, but not as [a kind of] be-ing. Just as little is it
given as an object. Dread is not an apprehension of no-thing.133 Nevertheless,
no-thing is made manifest by and in it, although, once again, not as if no-thing
appeared [zeigte sich] separate "from [neben]" be-ing as a whole, which we
found happening in uncanniness.*134 Rather, we have said that it happens no-
thing is at one with [in eins mit] be-ing as a whole.135 What does this "at one
with" mean?*136
In dread, be-ing as a whole becomes untenable. In what sense does this
happen? After all, be-ing is not annihilated [vernichtet] so that no-thing is left
132 *Fifth edition (1949): "Entbergung [opening up]." (WM 113)
133 "Die Angst ist kein Erfassen des Nichts." (WM 113)
134 Fifth edition (1949): "Unheimlichkeit und Unverborgenheit [uncanniness
and emergence]." (WM 113)
135 " . . . das Nichts begenet in der Angst in eins mit dem Seienden im
Ganzen." (WM 113)
136 *Fifth edition (1949): "der Unterschied [the difference]."